Life is interconnected and so are the topics on this blog. It might be cooking and gardening one day, yoga the next, knitting and sewing, or hiking and then bird watching followed by recycling or composting. They are the parts that bring humble joy to my life of voluntary simplicity in Montana.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Arizona, By the Numbers

Six and half days in Arizona.

Matt loved the view through that gap in the red rocks. This was the sunniest afternoon of the trip and we basked like lizards on Bell Rock in Sedona.

Three afternoon pool parties.

Six different mini-golf courses at four different venues.

We played a round at Glow Putt on our trip in October, but thought it was cool enough to warrant a return visit this time. I got a hole-in-one on the hardest hole. Matt won every single round all week long though.

58 positively identified bird species.

Matt glassing for shorebirds on one of the ponds at The Water Ranch riparian preserve. Two Snowy Egrets are on the opposite bank.

This is a Rosy-Faced Lovebird (also known as a Peach-Faced Lovebird). They're native to Africa and are common pet birds. There is a wild breeding population in Phoenix--the only place in the USA they've thrived after being released or escaping captivity. I thought it was a fake parrot at first. Even though they're non-native we were still pretty starstruck by such a bright and beautiful bird.

One bottle of Cassis lambic.

I love lambic and had never tried the cassis (black currant) version before. We drank it from plastic cups out in the badlands, tucked under a rock ledge watching a desert rainstorm.

Six bomb vegan restaurants.

Biscuits and mushroom gravy with scrambled tofu and roasted red potatoes from The Coronado.

More petrified wood than I could have possibly imagined in one place.

Check out those petrified knot holes!! And the bark! Some looked striking like freshly downed logs rather than stone ones.

A hundred hummingbirds, give or take**.

There is the silhouette of a hummingbird drinking nectar from a saguaro bloom at center top of this photo.

One new national park^.

The size and variety of petrified wood was unexpectedly phenomenal. Some looked darn near tie-dyed they were so colorful. Some were a hundred feet long!

Four new national monuments^^.

Montezuma's Well with ruins on the far side. There is an ancient irrigation canal system that is still functional from the outflow of the Well. It was pretty mind blowing. No fish, but some endemic species of leech! The rattlesnakes are tagged so they can be relocated if they start interacting too much with humans! How crazy is that?!?! Chipped! Like my cats!!

Three petroglyph sites.

Matt and I agreed this rock was our favorite. Though that was a hard decision as we saw so many incredible groups to choose from. We did one off-trail hike around a butte where there were dozens of different panels scattered here and there. It was a fun treasure hunt spotting them among the rocks. Deer, foot prints, hand prints, lizards, birds, snakes, spirals, and other geometrics.

Four AirBnBs ranging from a popup camper to a shiny modern Mother-in-Law's house.

This AirBnB was just about perfect for us--swimming pool and close,walkable proximity to three vegan restaurants.

One incredibly rad oasis of a city park.

The Riparian Preserve at the Water Ranch in Glibert, Arizona didn't disappoint in proliferation of birds, mammals, and fabulous fauna. The Palo Verde was just one of the abundantly flowering plants. When we were driving back into Phoenix after Petrified Forest it was boggling how many of them we could see across the valley. It was like a sea of yellow.

A hundred thousand swarming bees***.

Two kokopellis.

I've had a thing for kokopelli since I was a kid, even before I learned all about the myths and symbology behind it. Seeing carvings in real life is such a swell treat for me as an adult. I'd only see one before, at Dinosaur National Monument.

Six days where it rained at least once.

It never rained all day and it never rained very hard so it didn't cramp our style much. Plus, the rain made the desert come to life in flowers, like this carpet of wee white blooms growing around all the petrified wood.

More desert flowers in bloom than I ever dreamed of seeing in my life****.

Seriously. The flowers were Off.The.Hook.

One afternoon climbing around the brilliantly red rocks of Sedona.

As soon as I saw Bell Rock I wanted to climb it. Matt was really angling more to walk around it, but he 's a good sport and was glad we went up, up, up in the end. ...And then we walked around the base, too, for good measure.

This spiral interacts with the sun on the summer solstice in a different, but similar was as the link above from the Puerco Pueblo site. The rising sun cuts the spiral almost exactly in half for several minutes. These timekeeping petroglyphs are abundant in the park with almost 20 recorded thus far. This level of ancient intimacy and knowledge with the season and stars is humbling and impressive to me.

Four different flavors of Soynami*****.

"Betterfinger" and "Dough-Boy"

One sprained ankle.

We thought the Arizona sycamore was a really nifty looking tree. This has nothing to do with my sprained ankle, but there weren't any pictures of that...and it is a pretty nifty tree so... The bark is smooth and has a fascinating speckled pattern.

20+ mural and mosaic street art.

Walls abound in urban desert design--in large part for privacy and sound barrier purposes. The neighborhood around one of our accommodations was well worked with street art which we thought was a pretty fab idea. The walls are canvases just waiting to be decorated.

Five different ancient puebloan and cliff dwelling sites, each with multiple ruins.

We learned a lot and were able to observe the subtle differences in dwelling styles in different locations and from different time periods. We saw one pueblo made from petrified wood. We were able to experience first hand the skill in regards to selecting a site sheltered from the blasting sun and able to catch the first morning light. This particular ruin is located at Montezuma's Well.

Zero concerts^^^.

There are so many colors in petrified wood. I had no idea they could be lime or mustard yellow or sparkling pink.

------------------Footnotes----------------------------
*Only 17 were new to me as I'd seen a Verdin and Boat-Tailed Grackle in Mexico and a Gambel's Quail on a previous trip to Arizona. Matt missed both sightings though and so they were still new to him.

**And I am not exaggerating. So many flowers. So many "bumblebirds." It was incredible.

***This is an estimate, of course, but a reasonable one. We were actually evacuated from the cliff dwelling and the whole site was temporarily closed. The buzzing was impressively loud.